Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Love with its face up to the sky

We've had many serious topics this October -- it's been month heavy with sadness, tragedy, fires, and the death of a dear friend.

I think we are overdue for a poem in this space. A gift from our dear friend Karen in Tennessee, this poem has several layers and folds. May you find many blessings today and may you feel God's love around you, in the flowers, at the dinner table, in the layers and folds of your life, in the ordinary things that are extraordinary. Be surprised.


Love Should Grow Up Like a Wild Iris in the Fields
By Susan Griffin

Love should grow up like a wild iris in the fields,
unexpected, after a terrible storm, opening a purple
mouth to the rain, with not a thought to the future,
ignorant of the grass and the graveyard of leaves
around, forgetting its own beginning.
Love should grow like a wild iris
but does not.

Love more often is to be found in kitchens at the dinner hour,
tired out and hungry, lingers over tables in houses where
the walls record movements, while the cook is probably angry,
and the ingredients of the meal are budgeted, while
a child cries feed me now and her mother not quite
hysterical says over and over, wait just a bit, just a bit,
love should grow up in the fields like a wild iris
but never does
really startle anyone, was to be expected, was to be
predicted, is almost absurd, goes on from day to day, not quite
blindly, gets taken to the cleaners every fall, sings old
songs over and over, and falls on the same piece of rug that
never gets tacked down, gives up, wants to hide, is not
brave, knows too much, is not like an
iris growing wild but more like
staring into space
in the street
not quite sure
which door it was, annoyed about the sidewalk being
slippery, trying all the doors, thinking
if love wished the world to be well, it would be well.

Love should
grow up like a wild iris, but doesn't, it comes from
the midst of everything else, sees like the iris
of an eye, when the light is right,
feels in blindness and when there is nothing else is
tender, blinks, and opens
face up to the skies.
"Light Iris," by Georgia O'Keefe, 1924

No comments: